2026-04-25

Burnout Looks Different Across the Org Chart. Watch for These Signs. | Daisy Auger-Domínguez

What leaders need to know about how it shows up, why it happens, and what they can do to help.

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Workplace burnout is often discussed as if it were a single condition with a single solution: fewer hours, better boundaries, more resilience. That framing is incomplete and misleading.

Burnout takes different forms depending on where someone sits in the organization, what they’re accountable for, and how much clarity, control, and moral alignment they have.

Over my two decades as a Chief People Officer and advisor to corporations and nonprofit organizations, as well as the author of Burnt Out to Lit Up, I’ve seen this pattern repeatedly, particularly during periods of rapid growth, crisis, or transformation. And burnout looks different for everyone. But across early-career employees, mid-career managers, senior executives, founders, and nonprofit leaders, burnout is shaped less by workload alone and more by power, proximity to decision-making, and exposure to unresolved tension.

As expectations expand up the career ladder and boundaries blur, burnout becomes harder to detect and more costly to ignore. Questions like “How do I know when I’m burning out?” or “How do I know if my team is?” often surface too late. When organizations treat it as a universal experience, they default to generic fixes, applying broad solutions to deeply specific problems.

Burnout is rarely a personal failure. It is usually a design failure. When capable, committed people are exhausted, the issue is not resilience; it is work engineered without regard for human limits and systems that quietly reward overextension. Poor workflows create constant urgency. Misaligned incentives normalize exhaustion. When burnout persists despite individual effort, it signals a breakdown in how power, risk, and reward are structured.

Leaders who want to prevent burnout—rather than react to it—must understand how it manifests at different stages of responsibility and influence. Here is a practical framework for leaders to identify burnout proactively in various roles and address the source of strain before exhaustion becomes the outcome.

Early Career: Burnout as Invisible Overload

How it can show up

Why it happens

In my work with early-career professionals—especially in fast-moving, high-expectation environments—burnout is often less about workload and more about lack of clarity paired with low control.

Many enter hybrid or remote workplaces without clear guidance on how work actually gets done: who makes decisions, how priorities are set, or how ideas evolve before they’re formally presented. The informal learning that once came from proximity is gone. In its place: guesswork. Early-career professionals spend enormous energy decoding invisible rules: how fast is fast enough, who actually has authority, and whether asking for clarity signals initiative or incompetence.

Junior employees experience misalignment at the senior level as role ambiguity. When there are too many sources of input, these employees are reacting to unclear expectations with limited authority to resolve competing demands. Research consistently shows that a lack of control and unclear expectations are stronger predictors of burnout than the number of hours worked alone.

One early-career employee once told me, “I spend half my day trying to figure out what my manager actually wants and the other half trying not to get it wrong.” She wasn’t disengaged. She was performing invisible labor—tracking tone, timing, and unspoken norms—that steadily wore her down.

At this stage, burnout can be less about fatigue and more about disorientation. Early-career employees may still be performing well, which is precisely why burnout often goes unnoticed. When people don’t know what “good” looks like, the safest option is to do everything.

What leaders can do to help

Mid-Career and Managers: Burnout as Compression

How it can show up

Managers often report feeling constantly behind, even when they’re working more than ever.

Why it happens Among mid-career managers I have coached, burnout often shifts from overwork to overload. This stage brings a sharp increase in responsibility without a corresponding increase in authority or support, otherwise known as responsibility without authority.

Managers are expected to translate strategy, withstand pressure, stabilize teams, and deliver results, often with unclear decision-making authority and limited resources. They sit between competing demands: senior leaders pushing for outcomes and teams asking for clarity, protection, and support.

It’s hard to commit to a plan you don’t understand or believe in. It’s harder still to defend decisions when the logic behind them isn’t clear. That’s when frustration, disengagement, and quiet resignation begin to creep in, all early signals of burnout.

Many professionals aren’t burning out simply because they’re working long hours. They’re improvising by logging on Sundays and staying half-connected at night, not out of disengagement, but to regain control in systems that do not support focus, clarity, or capacity.

In organizations that celebrate flexibility without guardrails, work doesn’t disappear; it leaks. Flexibility turns into constant availability. Personal time becomes overflow capacity. Disciplined mid-career employees and managers are burning out because availability has been normalized as a proxy for performance.

At this stage, burnout is about structural compression—too many demands, too little authority, and no clear place to put the pressure.

What leaders can do to help

Managers don’t need more motivation. They need relief from unnecessary load.

Executives: Burnout as Moral Injury

How it can show up

Executives may appear composed while privately feeling depleted, detached, or conflicted.

Why it happens What looks like disengagement at the early-career level often shows up as moral fatigue at the executive level.

From inside the C-suite and in my advisory work with leaders navigating layoffs, restructures, and rapid growth, I’ve seen burnout take on a different shape. It becomes a moral load weighted by decisions that impact people’s livelihoods and organizational futures. When leaders are repeatedly asked to act in ways that conflict with their values, burnout stops being about stress and starts being about integrity.

In Burnt Out to Lit Up, I describe this as the point where burnout becomes moral injury. Research by Jonathan Shay, who studied moral injury among combat veterans, shows that prolonged value conflict can lead to disengagement, cynicism, and emotional exhaustion, even when performance remains high.

Workplace research shows similar patterns: sustained role conflict and value misalignment are associated with higher stress, lower engagement, and increased risk of emotional exhaustion and cynicism.

What leaders can do to help

We can’t build cultures of care without practicing care ourselves. That starts with pace. Not speed, but rhythm: how often decisions are made, how pressure is absorbed, and where leaders pause to reflect before moving forward.

Executives don’t need more tolerance for pressure. They need places where honesty is safe.

Founders and Nonprofit Leaders: Burnout as Identity Collapse

How it can show up

For founders and nonprofit leaders, burnout often feels both structural (i.e. resource scarcity, funding pressure) and existential (a sense of sole responsibility for the mission).

Why it happens

Among founders—especially those leading venture-backed, nonprofit, or mission-driven organizations—burnout often emerges when mission and identity collapse into one another. The work stops being something they lead and becomes something they are.

Scarcity intensifies this dynamic. Limited funding, moral urgency, and constant tradeoffs raise the emotional stakes of every decision. When stepping back should feel like recovery, it can feel like abandonment.

I’ve seen this repeatedly in my work with nonprofit teams—executive directors, program heads, individual contributors, and founders—who believe they cannot slow down without letting someone down. As one leader told me, “If I rest, I worry no one will carry the mission.”

Research on founder burnout shows that over-identification with the organization is associated with emotional exhaustion, impaired decision-making, and reduced strategic clarity. Similar patterns appear among nonprofit leaders, where burnout can affect individuals and destabilize institutions. When leaders become indistinguishable from the work, rest can feel like betrayal instead.

What helps

Sustainability requires leaders to be more than the work they lead.

Burnout Is a Design Problem

Across roles, burnout is rarely solved in isolation by wellness benefits, resilience workshops, or productivity hacks. Those approaches shift responsibility onto individuals while leaving the primary drivers of burnout untouched: how work is designed, how decisions are made, and how tension is acknowledged or avoided.

Across the organization chart, effective responses to burnout fall into two categories:

System Design Fixes

Structural and Incentive Fixes

Often, the most radical move is not a new strategy. It is asking better questions early enough to change the trajectory, like:

If you don’t like the answers, don’t demand more endurance. Redesign the work.

This article was originally published online on April 3, 2026.

Daisy Auger-Domínguez is Global Chief People Officer at a fintech company and author of Burnt Out to Lit Up and Inclusion Revolution. With two decades leading people strategy at Google, Disney, Moody’s, and VICE Media, she advises executive teams and boards on building cultures that perform at scale without burning out in the process. A TEDx speaker and Forbes contributor, she helps leaders navigate complexity and lead what’s next, not what wears them down.


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